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TIMES AND DATES.

METHODS OF MEMORISING. Revealed in Court Case. Many people have but a poor faculty for recalling times and dates, and some use weird methods of assisting their memories in this respect. It is not often, however, that counsel and the bench are so mystified in arriving at exactness in point of time as last Friday in the Putaruru Court, when a somewhat minor case was being heard.

One party averred that he kept a proper wages book but had left it at home. He was sure of the period, however, for he had attended a football match in Putaruru on the Saturday afternoon in question, and that ruled out the possibility of liis, opponent’s claim that November was the date of the job.

Constant reference to Sundays brought forth a rather querulous question from the bench, which was repeated on many occasions, as to which of two Sundays was referred to. In desperation one of the counsel employed at last identified the days as the “ measuring-up ” Sunday (when the job was measured) and the “ working Sunday ” (when the job was started). This elucidated matters however but for a short space, as the question of hours worked then arose. As the workman in question did not possess a watch, hut was confident of the correctness of his time sheet, he was asked to explain. Repeated questions elicited the information that meal hours, the setting of the sun, the degree of darkness of the evening, and the kitchen clock, all assisted this witness in calculating the hours he worked. As witness received his meals before travelling some miles to his home, the tone of the examining counsel’s voice betrayed the fact that he thought he had scored a point after the hint of the kitchen clock. Not so, however, for witness was a good unionist and charged for travelling time. “ Yes,” replied the exasperated counsel, “ you are a typical unionist, you charge for meal hours.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PUP19270317.2.41

Bibliographic details

Putaruru Press, Volume V, Issue 176, 17 March 1927, Page 8

Word Count
326

TIMES AND DATES. Putaruru Press, Volume V, Issue 176, 17 March 1927, Page 8

TIMES AND DATES. Putaruru Press, Volume V, Issue 176, 17 March 1927, Page 8